2014 | 2015 | ||||||
Price: | 6.50 | EPS | $0.71 | $0.00 | |||
Shares Out. (in M): | 13 | P/E | 9.2x | 0.0x | |||
Market Cap (in $M): | 84 | P/FCF | 0.0x | 0.0x | |||
Net Debt (in $M): | -62 | EBIT | 8 | 0 | |||
TEV (in $M): | 23 | TEV/EBIT | 2.7x | 0.0x |
Sign up for free guest access to view investment idea with a 45 days delay.
Long WILC, a cheap microcap Israeli based food distributor. WILC is valued cheaply (and has always been valued pretty cheaply) due to governance and capital allocation concerns. See previous VIC write-ups for history about the company’s lack of prudent capital allocation. Management always seems to be promising that there will be an acquisition of a U.S. based distributor or a dividend right around the corner, but nothing ever seems to materialize. Recently in March of 2014 a change in control of the managements’ investment vehicle (through which they own a majority of WILC shares) has caused more concern in this regard.
Why Bother (It’s Super Cheap)
I own this investment despite some of the governance risks I will get to below because it is a good business that is selling very cheaply.
MV: $84M Net Cash $62M ($4.76/sh, 73% of MV), EV $23M
Good Company
Gross Margins: 23-25%, ROA (Ex cash): 15%, ROE (with cash): 9%, growth profile 5%+
Due to the company’s large cash position, the company is selling at pretty ridiculous EV multiples:
TTM: EV/EBIT 2.7, EV/NOPAT 3.5
The company is cheap even if the company’s history scares you away from giving credit for the cash:
P/B .8, P/E 9.2 so even if nothing ever happens with the cash, you get a double digit earnings yield to MV and downside protection from the balance sheet.
Company Overview
Willi-Food is a food distributor of Kosher products (that also has some branded products) with 80% of sales in Israel. Sales are primarily from dairy (26%), canned vegetables (18%), and edibles oils (10%).
The business is a good return on capital (15% ROA ex cash), niche, stable business with low capital requirements. It is a low-growth business but has good tailwinds selling Kosher foods which have had higher growth (15% estimated Kosher market growth) due to health-conscious buying. The company has been able to grow around 5-10% in most years.
Occasionally the company can have bad years (but remains solidly profitable) when the Isreal economy has a downturn or the company has margin pressure due to food/fuel inflation with price increases lagging behind COGS increases. This occurred in 2011 with protests about high dairy prices in Isreal caused WILC to drop its prices with the result of operating income dropping in half. The company has grown quickly since then, recovering back most of the profit drop.
Gross margins are about 25% with operating margins of 8-9%, which are high considering the industry. The company grew sales by 17% and operating profit by 24% in 2013. The company has stated that it expects 2014 will have double digit revenue growth with slightly higher gross profit margins, helped by some new product introductions.
Management and Company History
Since it’s inception in 1994, G Willi-Food has been run by brothers Zwi (Chairman) and Joseph Willinger (President) who owned 58% of WILC through their investment vehicle Willi-Food Investments (WFI).
The biggest blight on capital allocation is when the company did a dilutive public offering of $19M in 2010 when the company already had excess cash. The offering was supposed to be used for an imminent acquisition into the U.S. market that never occurred. The cash has been idle on the balance sheet ever since. Executive compensation has not been outrageous. Other than the 2010 offering, there have not been any actions that would be considered for entry on the dumbest capital allocation threads. The company has made some successful small acquisitions (such as Gold Frost and Shamir salads), in the past but nothing too impactful (well maybe Gold Frost but that was from 2001).
At times the company looked as though it was about to become shareholder friendly but didn’t quite follow through. The company paid a small .15/sh dividend in 2005 but has not paid any dividends since. In 2011, the company bought back $2.9M of stock from a $5M authorization. Because the company often trades at very cheap valuation, buybacks would obviously be the best use of the cash. But because of the already consolidated ownership and concerns about trading liquidity, buybacks/tenders were never considered on a large scale. A large tender would still make a lot more sense than a U.S. acquisition, but this probably won’t happen.
Emblaze Transaction
Emblaze is owned by Ukrainian Oligarch Alexander Granovsky. He is deeply religious with ties to the Chabad Jewish movement. He has a complicated pyramid ownership structure for his companies and has stated his primary focus is to make money to fund donations to the Chabad movement.
IDB Holdings is Israeli’s largest conglomerate, holding interests in Cellcom (Israel’s largest mobile operator), Clal Insurance (#2 insurance company), and Super-Sol (large supermarket chain and WILC’s largest customer). It is currently coming out of bankruptcy. In November of 2013, the Willinger brothers teamed up with Granovsky and Nochi Danker (IDB’s Chairman) to try to obtain control of IBD. In November of 2013, WILC provided a convertible loan of $19M to IDB in this attempt. In December, the group lost its bid for IDB control to Moti Ben-Moshe and Eduardo Elsztain (Cresud Chariman) from Argentina and the convertible loan was repaid in January.
An interesting quote from Granovsky in August of 2013:
“We’re entering Israel to do business, even if I don’t win IDB, I’ll seek to invest in Israel. If we win the tender, through IDB we’ll make more investments. It’s impossible for us not to win IDB, but if God decides no, then we’ll find another investment in Israel.”
The first part of the last sentence is umm, a bit scary from the perspective of WILC investors, but he soon delivered on the final statement with the WFI transaction.
In March of 2014, Emblaze (Israel based but listed in London), agreed to purchase a majority share of WFI (listed in Isreal) from the Willinger brothers for $77M, thereby gaining majority control of WILC. The Willinger brother will no longer own the company, put will continue as managers for at least 3 years pending shareholder approval. At that time they would be around 60 years old and might be looking to retire.
Here are some of the bigger risks that pop out of this string of events:
Corporate Holding Structure
Alexander Granovsky – Controls Chabad 770
Chabad 770, Granovsky’s private foundation, based in Netherlands. “Profits are intended for charitable purposes and Jewish institutions worldwide”.” Controls ZBI.
ZBI, controls BGI
BGI, based and publicly traded in Israel (ticker BGI). Owns 44.1% of Emblaze, controls 58.56% of voting shares
Emblaze, based in Israel, publicly traded in London (ticker BLZ), $101M Market Cap. Formally ran tech companies now a cash shell. Chaired by a Rabbi. $59M in net corporate cash + WFI ownership + tiny tech business+ Corporate SGA. Owns and controls 62% of WFI.
WFI, publicly traded in Israel, $81M Market Cap. $17M in net corporate cash, owns 58% of WILC
WILC, publicly traded in US, $86M market cap. $62M in cash.
Plans for the acquired WILC stake are to focus on expanding operations internationally, with a focus on Europe. In the last conference call, the Willinger’s mentioned that several acquisition targets are being looked at. Talking about acquisitions and not going through with them has been a recurring theme with WILC. Now that Granovsky is in control of capital allocation, this could change.
I view the governance/capital allocation risks as a concern, but am willing to go along with them at this price. I don’t expect any catalyst to occur from a buyout/deploying the excess cash into that fabled U.S. acquisition/special dividend, but they could occur, and at this price you are not paying for that upside. There does remain a risk that an overpriced acquisition occurs.
On the other hand, I am also making the bet that the cash will be blown on something stupid or that some type of fraud or self-dealing will hugely impact minority shareholders. I think Granovsky wants to make money, and that his incentives are roughly aligned with minority shareholders. I think he would like to grow WILC’s value/earnings and see more Kosher food sold around the world. I also think that international expansion is a good opportunity for WILC. If Granovsky eventually wants to make money, he will eventually have to dividend the cash up through the corporate pyramid, at which point minority WILC shareholders will also be paid.
WILC’s corporate structure does prevent some abuse of minority shareholders through provisions that the audit committee, BOD, and shareholders vote on extraordinary transactions involving controlling shareholders:
Approval of the audit committee, board of directors and our shareholders, in that order, is required for:
The shareholder approval must include the majority of shares voted at the meeting. In addition, either:
the total shareholdings of those who have no personal interest in the transaction and who vote against the transaction must not represent more than 2% of the aggregate voting rights in the company
At the end of the day, the governance risk is the biggest issue with this company. At the current price I am willing to accept that risk. I assume that shares will have a nice gain here either through the market giving the company a more normalized multiple, or from the business’s improving financial results/cash accumulation.
1 year return valuation targets:
$K |
Down |
Base |
Upside |
Emblaze Valuation |
|
Sales Growth |
-5% |
Flat |
5% |
Sales Growth |
10% |
Op Margin |
6.5% (2011 Trough) |
Flat (8.7%) |
9.0% |
Op Margin |
9.0% |
Operating Income |
5,978 |
8,411 |
9,149 |
Operating Income |
9,584 |
Taxes |
24% |
24% |
24% |
Taxes |
24% |
NOPAT |
4,543 |
6,392 |
6,953 |
NOPAT |
7,284 |
Multiple |
5.00 |
8.00 |
12.00 |
Multiple |
18.8 |
EV |
22,717 |
51,139 |
83,436 |
Emblaze WFI Purchase |
76,600 |
Existing Net Cash |
61,752 |
61,752 |
61,752 |
% Ownership of WFI |
58% |
Cash Build |
6,500 |
6,900 |
1,000 |
100% WFI MV Valuation |
132,069 |
Total Net Cash |
68,252 |
68,652 |
62,752 |
Less WFI Cash |
17,000 |
Cash Value |
75% |
90% |
100% |
WFI EV Valuation |
115,069 |
Cash Valuation |
51,189 |
61,787 |
62,752 |
% Ownership of WILC |
58% |
Market Value |
73,906 |
112,926 |
146,188 |
WILC Implied Market value |
198,395 |
Price Per Share |
5.70 |
8.70 |
11.27 |
Price Per Share |
15.29 |
Gain |
-12% |
34% |
73% |
Gain |
135% |
Note: Market Value Valuations 1 year From Now |
|
||||
P/E |
11.3 |
12.3 |
15.0 |
P/E |
19.7 |
P/B |
0.66 |
0.99 |
1.27 |
P/B |
1.72 |
It is tough to come up with a scenario where you lose money here long term. Outside of some governance abuse/dumb acquisition, the company has very little downside. I estimated a 15% downside from here based on a small sales decline and a significant margin contraction. At that point the company would be trading at 2/3 of book value and have 90%+ of the company’s market cap covered by net cash.
I think a reasonable 1 year-ish target is up 35% back towards $9/share. This is where the company traded earlier in the year before the Emblaze transaction. There is a potentially much higher return (70%+) if the company gets a reasonable multiple and full value for its cash.
show sort by |
Are you sure you want to close this position G WILLI-FOOD INTL LTD?
By closing position, I’m notifying VIC Members that at today’s market price, I no longer am recommending this position.
Are you sure you want to Flag this idea G WILLI-FOOD INTL LTD for removal?
Flagging an idea indicates that the idea does not meet the standards of the club and you believe it should be removed from the site. Once a threshold has been reached the idea will be removed.
You currently do not have message posting privilages, there are 1 way you can get the privilage.
Apply for or reactivate your full membership
You can apply for full membership by submitting an investment idea of your own. Or if you are in reactivation status, you need to reactivate your full membership.
What is wrong with message, "".